The West Andean Thrust, the San Ramón Fault, and the seismic hazard for Santiago, Chile
Artículo
Open/ Download
Publication date
2010Metadata
Show full item record
Cómo citar
Armijo, Rolando
Cómo citar
The West Andean Thrust, the San Ramón Fault, and the seismic hazard for Santiago, Chile
Author
Abstract
The importance of west verging structures at the
western flank of the Andes, parallel to the subduction
zone, appears currently minimized. This hampers our
understanding of the Andes‐Altiplano, one of the most
significant mountain belts on Earth. We analyze a key
tectonic section of the Andes at latitude 33.5°S, where
the belt is in an early stage of its evolution, with the
aim of resolving the primary architecture of the orogen.
We focus on the active fault propagation–fold system in
the Andean cover behind the San Ramón Fault, which is
critical for the seismic hazard in the city of Santiago and
crucial to decipher the structure of the West Andean
Thrust (WAT). The San Ramón Fault is a thrust ramp
at the front of a basal detachment with average slip rate
of ∼0.4 mm/yr. Young scarps at various scales imply
plausible seismic events up to Mw 7.4. The WAT steps
down eastward from the San Ramón Fault, crossing
12 km of Andean cover to root beneath the Frontal
Cordillera basement anticline, a range ∼5 km high and
>700 km long. We propose a first‐order tectonic model
of the Andes involving an embryonic intracontinental
subduction consistent with geological and geophysical
observations. The stage of primary westward vergence
with dominance of the WAT at 33.5°S is evolving into
a doubly vergent configuration. A growth model for
the WAT‐Altiplano similar to the Himalaya‐Tibet is
deduced.Wesuggest that the intracontinental subduction
at theWAT is amechanical substitute of a collision zone,
rendering the Andean orogeny paradigm obsolete.
Patrocinador
Our work has been supported by the binational
French‐Chilean ECOS‐Conicyt program (project C98U02), the
French Agence Nationale pour la Recherche, Project Sub Chile (ANR‐05‐
CATT‐014), and the Chilean ICM project “Millennium Science Nucleus
of Seismotectonics and Seismic Hazard,”
Quote Item
TECTONICS, VOL. 29, TC2007, 2010
Collections